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2 yr. ago

  • I have interpreted it less as "the hobbits are less powerful", and more as "what would a powerful hobbit even want?".

    If a hobbit had all the power in Middle Earth, they would have an amazingly cozy hobbit hole with the best food and their parties and garden would be the envy of every hobbit and probably some elves and men. Hobbits don't really have much interest in conquest, and their definition of dominance includes being well-liked or admired by those they dominate.

  • That is an insult to Babish.

  • I'm pretty sure the Twin Cities metro is north of Toronto as well which would mean most of the population of Minnesota is north of most of the population of Canada.

  • Hey now....South Canada already refers to Minnesota. Y'all can get your own new nickname.

  • Trump has had a lot of nasty things to say about Minneapolis after BLM.

  • We really should just tax the ever-loving fuck out of them or evict them to Texas or something.

  • I came here to say this. I'm not entirely sure I would object all that much.

  • As an adult female human, I have never been called a "female" in a positive or neutral tone. The key point is that you basically never hear people calling men "males" anywhere outside of scientific discussion.

  • It's the trophies from the enslavement and murder. They didn't get to keep the people, but they did keep souvenirs.

  • The easy way to understand and remember is that "female" is an adjective the vast majority of the time, and it's usually misogynists and incels using it as a noun.

  • I think that's the point. Every country/culture/society has its own problems and it is quite grating when individuals from various countries act like their country's problems aren't as bad as everyone else's or that their excuses are valid but no one else's is.

  • I will believe this when the British museum, the Louvre, etc are devoid of stolen (or very unfairly "purchased") artifacts from former colonies. Generational responsibility may not be a thing, but institutional abuses spanning centuries that persist into the current day absolutely are.

  • I have ADHD and I have worked in Emergency Medicine...and the lulls just result in going down weird rabbit holes in the medical information databases. I'm a medical student now and I am really hoping to get into Emergency med for residency.

  • This is a very grim subject, but this is going to be a growing problem in many areas of the world. If your personal belief system and culture permits it, you should consider lower-impact burial options such as cremation. There are options for water-based dissolution "cremation" now in addition to the traditional incendiary variety.

    This video by Caitlin Doughty (Ask A Mortician on Youtube) talks about some of the new, eco-friendly options, and this playlist has a bunch of videos about practical death questions.

  • I think there are some that have clauses about dying during the commission of a crime.

  • They're trying SO HARD to make it look like a fringe, extremist position instead of the groundswell of righteous fury that it is.

  • This is true and the healthcare access problem is more than just cost. If you're an hour and a half away from any specialists, then the ER you went to likely doesn't have access to set up those referrals. I have worked in both metropolitan and rural medical systems, and the biggest problems in rural healthcare are almost always access-based. If a hospital/ER is not in the same medical group as a specialist, they can't put in emergency referrals to that specialist, and I have worked in rural hospitals that don't even always have imaging services available. There's an MRI on a trailer that gets brought around to the various hospitals in the group meaning that each hospital has one day a week or one day every other week where an MRI is available. The other option a small, rural ER has is to call EMS to transfer you to another hospital with more resources, but if your insurance doesn't like the reason they give, you end up on the hook for that 90 minute ambulance ride. Small community hospitals are really between a rock and a hard place when it comes to connecting patients with resources while trying to avoid unnecessary expenses.

    The best advice I have for anyone in a rural area with poor healthcare access is to establish care with a family physician for primary care because, most of the time, the primary care physician is the one that actually gets to the bottom of things or coordinates the referrals for specialists. If you have a standing relationship with a physician, it's a lot easier to make an appointment and they have a baseline to work from as opposed to starting from scratch like an ER physician has to.

  • Unfortunately, a solid diagnosis can be really hard to find and there are a lot of diseases and conditions that require more testing than can be completed in the ER. Part of why the ER is expensive is because the tests they do get come back almost immediately, but they very rarely order the tests that take a long time anyways. Expediency and staffing are the main contributors to the cost of emergency care.

    With the example of your case, how would the ER get you the diagnosis of a food intolerance without spending weeks on an elimination diet? There are some allergies that can be tested for, but that testing involves injecting a sample of the offending agent under the skin and watching to see if it causes irritation.... but allergies and food intolerances are not the same thing and the only way to test for food intolerances is an elimination diet. For the allergy testing, the ER doesn't have the samples to do the subcutaneous injections. It's really only allergy specialists that have those available.

  • I'm very sorry that you went through that. I know it sucks with the American healthcare $ystem, but you are always allowed to seek a second opinion and any provider that is opposed to that is a bad provider and you shouldn't see them again anyways.

    One thing to keep in mind about the ER though, is that they're there to rule out anything that is going to kill you quickly, and if you didn't lose enough blood to drop your hemoglobin count (a measure of how many red blood cells you have), it is perfectly within the standard of care for them to discharge you and tell you to follow up with your primary care physician or a specialist. The ER has a lot of resources, but not enough resources to fully diagnose every possible problem. They can make sure you're not on death's doorstep, and stabilize you if you are, but beyond that, they're pretty strapped for resources and staffing which make it hard to fully work up every mystery diagnosis.